Some quantum computing companies we've covered have done recent progress updates.
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But if the wire contains an odd number of conducting electrons—meaning there’s a single unpaired electron—it will end up delocalized to both ends of the wire. (Because quantum mechanics is weird.)
Uh, nothing? What a weird question.What would happen if this thing all of a sudden appeared in the U.S in 1900 and the government got a hold of it?
My imagination is just fine. I question yours if you think that question makes any sense in this context. Unless in your imagination the U.S. in 1900 is something totally divorced from reality. In which case... fine, I guess? Still a totally misplaced and nonsensical question in the context of this article.Clearly imagination is not a part of your life.
It's not cool, it's cold. Liquid helium cold. You might think it's cold walk down to the chemist's in winter, but that's just peanuts to liquid helium.I'd like to just give a shout out to humanity on this one. We're productively and reproducibly manipulating individual subatomic particles! How COOL is that?
??What would happen if this thing all of a sudden appeared in the U.S in 1900 and the government got a hold of it?
Not sure, but based on your question, you might appreciate Rome Sweet RomeWhat would happen if this thing all of a sudden appeared in the U.S in 1900 and the government got a hold of it?
I had a chat with one of the researchers behind what's probably the largest photon-based quantum computing companies out there about a year ago or so (?). He gave me a lot of background on its hardware and how they were hoping to use it, and everyone said they'd be in touch the next time they announced a major milestone or had a good paper. Since then, silence. And this is in a field where I get way more announcements than I can possibly cover.So these are interesting, but one technology I've always wanted to hear more on is missing... John, has there been any word on fully optical quantum computing?
I remember an Ars article a few years back on that (possibly by you?), that seemed like it was making big strides, then it just seems like it went completely silent.
Way. Thing is though, they are us and we are they already. And we never had any say in the matter. Until now, maybe. Where/what/who is the real manipulator?I'd like to just give a shout out to humanity on this one. We're productively and reproducibly manipulating individual subatomic particles! How COOL is that?
For my money, all non-billions of it, my bets are on quantum computing as the future; AI will be the side-show act. And humanity? Always the main attraction.I had a chat with one of the researchers behind what's probably the largest photon-based quantum computing out there about a year ago or so (?). He gave me a lot of background on its hardware and how they were hoping to use it, and everyone said they'd be in touch the next time they announced a major milestone or had a good paper. Since then, silence. And this is in a field where I get way more announcements than I can possibly cover.
Thanks for that update, appreciated. A shame... I'd always thought it had the greatest potential, but if it has been radio silence even to someone who is staying plugged in to the industry, it's not a good sign :/I had a chat with one of the researchers behind what's probably the largest photon-based quantum computing out there about a year ago or so (?). He gave me a lot of background on its hardware and how they were hoping to use it, and everyone said they'd be in touch the next time they announced a major milestone or had a good paper. Since then, silence. And this is in a field where I get way more announcements than I can possibly cover.
As time goes by in this field, each article is less and less understandable to me. At this stage, I'm just parsing them to see if it sounds like progress or not. When it eventually works, I'll probably just accept it as magic.Once again confirming that the more I read about QC the less I understand but thank you anyhow for this update
I always knew that the old reel of 60/40 solder in my tool box would be useful one day.In its earlier version of its hardware, it used aluminum as a superconductor (the devices are kept near absolute zero). That’s been replaced with lead. The underlying semiconductor was also reformulated to include some tin, which improved the spin-orbit coupling between its electrons and those in the lead.
While I mostly agree, I think they would be a little further along than holding a 5090 and looking at it as simply a brick.??
It wouldn't do anything because we barely have the technology and infrastructure required to make and operate these things today. They don't have the electricity distribution solved, they certainly can't maintain liquid helium, and most important of all they have no comprehension of how to use a computing device of any kind. They wouldn't have any way of knowing what these were even building towards, much less what they could do with them in their current state.
It's sort of like asking what would happen if the US government got a hold of a Starlink satellite in 1910. Or Helion's latest Polaris prototype. Or an ASML litho machine. Or even an RTX 5090. Even making them work is likely beyond the infrastructure they have available, and they lack even the beginning of enough context to understand what they would do if they did work.
To be clear, not because they're dumber than us. It's just that a 5090 without a PC and a monitor doesn't do anything, and it doesn't tell you that it needs a PC and a monitor, or what it would do if it had them. They can't observe the silicon in any useful way; if they take the packaging off, they'll just see a shiny square. The machines in this article don't actually do anything other than demonstrate that they've made some progress in some approaches to making a device based on their respective technologies able to do something useful.
Nah, it's just technology. Computers have bits. Quantum computers have qubits.Once again confirming that the more I read about QC the less I understand but thank you anyhow for this update
Centuries of mathematicians spent their careers generating lookup tables by hand. Do you really believe no one would be able to find a use for a machine that could automate that task? Mechanical calculators were described in the 1700s, and were being built and used by the mid-1800s. Babbage had described his general purpose computer in the 1830s. Thomson was building tide predictors in the 1870s.and most important of all they have no comprehension of how to use a computing device of any kind
Off topic, but I think the Wikipedia article's conclusion is too pessimistic. You can do a hell of a lot by combining superiour technology with a bit of bluffing, treachery, a well-timed decapitation strike, and good intelligence about existing factions within an empire. Ask Pizarro or Cortez. (Their resupply issues weren't quite as severe, but I think the point stands.)Not sure, but based on your question, you might appreciate Rome Sweet Rome
I wondered about that too. Is the resonator in a quantum superposition? Maybe in one state, maybe in another? Or maybe it has one allowable state, maybe it has two?End of second last paragraph:
“Since the electron’s motional states are quantized, the resonator adopts one >or< two states during the experimental procedure…”
…one >of< two states…?
We're talking about just dropping them a 5090. How would they even figure out how to communicate with it? Build everything needed to get it up and running?Do you really believe no one would be able to find a use for a machine that could automate that task?
Obviously on to something but it’s being suppressed by Big Photon. The Forbidden Wavelengths are real!I had a chat with one of the researchers behind what's probably the largest photon-based quantum computing companies out there about a year ago or so (?). He gave me a lot of background on its hardware and how they were hoping to use it, and everyone said they'd be in touch the next time they announced a major milestone or had a good paper. Since then, silence. And this is in a field where I get way more announcements than I can possibly cover.
In 1900, even the leap to "it's a calculator" is pretty questionable. Talking about Einstein etc doesn't really hand wave away the total lack of comparable technologies they had, what those guys were doing was mathematics. You wouldn't look at a vacuum tube and a 5090 and conclude they had anything in common other than electricity. Calculators were mechanical.We're talking about just dropping them a 5090. How would they even figure out how to communicate with it? Build everything needed to get it up and running?
In 1900, even the leap to "it's a calculator" is pretty questionable. Talking about Einstein etc doesn't really hand wave away the total lack of comparable technologies they had, what those guys were doing was mathematics. You wouldn't look at a vacuum tube and a 5090 and conclude they had anything in common other than electricity. Calculators were mechanical.
They were 50 years from a basic transistor.
Good for about 20 seconds before needing to drop the new coolest atom into the spotlight, apparently!I'd like to just give a shout out to humanity on this one. We're productively and reproducibly manipulating individual subatomic particles! How COOL is that?